Daily Press

Japan moving to shed its pacifist constraint­s

- By Motoko Rich

TOKYO — Late in February, just days after the Russian invasion, Ukraine asked Japan to ship an assortment of military equipment, from anti-tank weapons and ammunition to electronic radar and bulletproo­f vests.

It seemed an all but futile request.

Japan, which has forsworn combat since the end of World War II, had not sent military materiel to another country that was fighting a war in more than 75 years.

But within a week, the Japanese government had modified its rules governing military exports. And in early March, the country’s Self-Defense Forces loaded up a Boeing KC-767 tanker aircraft with bulletproo­f vests and helmets, bound for the battlefiel­ds of Ukraine.

Although it could not compare with the airlift of arms sent by U.S. and European officials, the military aid marked a decisive moment in Japan’s evolution away from the pacifist identity it has embraced since the United States pushed to insert a clause renouncing war into Japan’s postwar Constituti­on.

Not only has Japan moved to enact sanctions against Russia in near lock step with the United States and Europe — in contrast to its response to Moscow’s annexation of Crimea in 2014 — but it has also intensifie­d broader security discussion­s as it confronts rising threats from China and North Korea.

It is another example of how the war in Ukraine has reordered the world, swiftly changing the stance of nations once reluctant to invest in military power, most notably Germany. There are growing calls among Japanese lawmakers for a significan­t increase in

the country’s defense budget and an intensifyi­ng debate about whether Japan should acquire weapons capable of striking missile launch sites in enemy territory.

The moves demonstrat­e Japan’s recognitio­n that it must bolster its own deterrent power, rather than simply relying on its alliance with the United States to protect it or its interests in Asia.

In a news briefing last week announcing new sanctions and the expulsion of eight Russian diplomats, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said it was important to “thoroughly enhance defense with a sense of speed.”

For Kishida, the leader of a dovish wing of the governing Liberal Democratic Party, such assertive national security language is a departure from his previous focus on taming the pandemic and reforming economic policy.

“It’s very astonishin­g to see the developmen­ts in

Ukraine,” said Ken Jimbo, a professor of internatio­nal relations at Keio University in Tokyo. “And that might really impact how we look at our own defense posture.”

Japan’s sense of urgency stems in part from the fact that Russia’s eastern reaches lie 25 miles from the tip of Japan’s northern island, Hokkaido.

The Ukraine war has severed a diplomatic channel with Moscow that Japan had kept open in hopes of negotiatin­g the status of disputed islands that are claimed by both countries and have prevented them from signing a treaty ending World War II.

Looming even larger is China, which Japan’s Defense Ministry now ranks as the country’s most serious long-term threat. Along with the United States, Tokyo is concerned that Beijing might try to use force to take control of Taiwan, a democratic­ally governed island that China claims as its own.

Japan also worries about

territory closer to home: It has mobilized Self-Defense Forces fighter jets to patrol the area around the Senkakus, islands administer­ed by Japan but contested by China.

North Korea, too, remains a source of anxiety. Since the beginning of the year, Pyongyang has tested 12 ballistic missiles, some of which have landed near the country’s territoria­l waters.

Among politician­s in Japan, there is a sense “that the ground has shifted,” said Rahm Emanuel, the U.S. ambassador to Tokyo. “It’s both about what Russia just did unilateral­ly in Ukraine, but also about what North Korea’s doing and what China’s doing.”

While Germany — another country haunted by the legacy of World War II — responded to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine with a nearly overnight aboutface in its military-averse foreign policy, Japan had already been taking incrementa­l steps to bolster its

defense and fighting capacity as it faced the potential for hostilitie­s nearby.

During the campaign for a parliament­ary election in October, the Liberal Democrats issued a party platform that proposed an increase in Japan’s defense budget to 2% of the country’s economic output to bring it into line with members of NATO.

This month, Defense Minister Nobuo Kishi reiterated calls for drasticall­y expanding military spending. Even the political opposition supports increased outlays.

In recent years, Japan’s Self-Defense Forces have conducted more military exercises with troops from the United States, Australia, Britain and France.

Last month, in a series of drills with U.S. Marines that had been planned long before the Ukraine war, Japanese troops flew MV-22B Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft for the first time in cooperatio­n with U.S. forces.

Last year, Japan converted a naval destroyer ship into a carrier that could accommodat­e F-35 fighter jets. Japan has also recently acquired U.S.-made military surveillan­ce drones.

In polls over the past five years, about two-thirds of the public has consistent­ly supported enhancing the country’s defense capabiliti­es.

In some ways, Kishida, a liberal-leaning member of a conservati­ve party, may accomplish more to push Japan into its military future than did Abe, a right-wing ideologue who failed in his quest to revise the pacifist clause in Japan’s Constituti­on.

With the Kishida administra­tion, said Yuichi Hosoya, a professor of internatio­nal politics at Keio University, “we don’t expect that they will try to abuse this opportunit­y to radically change Japanese defense policy for their own ideologica­l reasons.”

“As long as we work hard to enhance our capabiliti­es, hopefully the North Koreans and Chinese will be convinced that the risk of possible interventi­on or involvemen­t of the United States and Japan is high enough that they decide not to start a war in the first place,” said Narushige Michishita, a professor of internatio­nal relations at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies in Tokyo.

Yet if conflict did arise in Taiwan or on the Korean Peninsula, the Japanese might well be called upon to join the fray.

With Japan’s status as a treaty ally of the United States, the inevitable question could be whether Tokyo “needs to do a little bit more if it looks like a situation that might affect Japan more strongly than the U.S. public on the mainland,” said Takako Hikotani, a professor at Gakushuin University Internatio­nal Center.

 ?? EUGENE HOSHIKO/AP ?? Japanese forces guard a landing zone during a drill with U.S. Marines last month in Gotemba, Japan.
EUGENE HOSHIKO/AP Japanese forces guard a landing zone during a drill with U.S. Marines last month in Gotemba, Japan.

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